| Moulin
  Rouge
   Holly
  J. Hancock
    
   Context:
   When
  Moulin Rouge came to the theatres
  last year, the public didn’t quite know what to think. 
  But they knew they were seeing a rarity in the movies – something new. 
  Any success a contemporary musical film can glean in the box office
  would be worthy of note.  Not many but Madonna (starring in the screen version of
  Webber’s Evita) have had the guts
  to do a live action (vs. animation) musical film in the last few decades. 
  Though there have been some forerunners sacrificed to the public in the
  nineties (Woody Allen’s Everybody Says I Love You; Kenneth Branagh’s musical rendition of Love’s
  Labours Lost), Grease (1978) has
  been the only successful contemporary film in which its characters have
  periodically burst into song.  Though
  dance has come back, it is still confined to the dance and opera halls.  Saturday Night Fever,
  Flashdance, Billy Elliot, and Save
  the Last Dance all contain dance as their subject matter, but dance
  contained within the designated social spheres already found in real life. 
  We have still not broken away from naturalism[i]. 
  Today’s audiences are too sophisticated for musicals. They want to be
  tricked into make believe.  If it’s not something as blatantly unreal as fantasy or
  science fiction, they either want to see “the way things are” or silly
  things as if they could happen.  Australian
  director, Baz Luhrmann may have found the missing key that has kept the
  musical locked on the island of Manhattan: 
  if the mass public is too sophisticated for musicals, then they may at
  least glance at a musical told in a sophisticated way. 
  
    
  
  
   Within
  his trio of “red curtain” style films, Moulin
  Rouge takes its place as the boldest of the three – after all, he
  didn’t try to midwife a genre with the other two. 
  In an interview found on the accompanying DVD release of the film,
  Luhrmann gushes of his triplets, 
    
   “It’s
  audience participation cinema.  In
  Strictly Ballroom, the story’s
  predominantly told through dance.  In
  Romeo & Juliet, the thing that
  constantly reminds you that its not reality is that they speak a heightened
  language.  And in this film,
  it’s the fact that they break into song…it’s the opposite of most
  cinema!”
    
   And
  in a day when anyone can make a movie with their Mac. Apple laptop, its about
  time the movies brought back song and dance. 
  This spoon-fed-entertainment generation was beginning to get bored.
    
   Plot
  and Development:  
   Unlike
  most musicals, Moulin Rouge seems to
  have a reason grander in scope than the occasion to sing and dance. 
  And though, technically, it is a jumble of flash and flurry, the
  screenplay by no means stutters at the main theme, but is happily burdened
  with a line excerpted from Nat King Cole’s hit, “Nature Boy”: 
  “the greatest thing, in all the world is just to love and be loved in
  return."  The haunting melody colors our minds in a perfect melancholy
  for tragedy as the hero begins to narrate the story of love found and lost.
    
   In
  a stroke of youthful rebellion a boy left his father in London to be a
  Bohemian revolutionary.  He has an
  untried faith in love as the “greatest thing in all the world,” and a
  talent for expressing himself in innovative ways (which are, hilariously, the
  least innovative to the audience, as they are borrowed from twentieth century
  pop culture).  His talent finds
  him the proposed writer of a Bohemian play and in the room of the famous
  Satine, courtesan at the Moulin Rouge, and aspiring actress in his play. 
  Despite a hilarious case of mistaken identity, the two fall in love and
  become vulnerable to the sticky web of the Parisian underworld that is
  dominated by the bourgeoisie.  Their
  love goes through various tests and must be kept secret, but they have a song
  and they sing their love to one another when disheartened. 
  By the end, the obstacles prove so oppressive that their love song is
  sung publicly, in defiance of all their enemies. 
  As they sing to one another before all, their duet takes on the
  significance of wedding vows – and this just in time. 
  For though their love will “live forever,” the tubercular Satine
  will not.  She dies in her
  beloved’s arms. 
    
   Not
  only is the main theme reiterated to its own exertion, every twist in plot is
  handily foreshadowed in the Bohemian play that our hero, Christian, is
  writing.  But a simple plot is a
  good idea in a technically complicated film. 
  If the form is elaborate, it is of communicative necessity that the
  content be simple.  For what is
  done with the message is manipulated by the form of its presentation, and Mr.
  Luhrmann has fun with his cinema.
    
   Existential 
  
   Moulin
  Rouge breaks categories
  in that its audience cannot simply put on their genre feelers and mindlessly
  go along.  The film loves
  cognitive dissonance to such an extent that, at first viewing, one finds
  herself given strange categories for what she is seeing. 
  We know from the hero’s first words that it will be a tragedy, yet as
  soon as we are launched into his narration, we are whizzed from the
  exaggerated sound effects and erratic movements of a cartoon to a raucous and
  colorful night club.  But just as
  one begins to feel they are in a glorified MTV video, tragedy strikes. 
  The heroine stops breathing.  Silence
  is put to its full time-stopping power and though the gutsy heroine recovers
  herself and continues the story before our eyes, we have not recovered. 
  Instead we are given completely different vision for which to see the
  Moulin Rouge.  The sudden fall of
  this chanteuse from her high trapeze has occasioned a complete transformation
  of the viewer’s perspective.  We
  are given the eyes of Satine and, with them, those of the Bohemian artist;
  slave to the patronage of the Bourgeoisie. 
  Likewise, the mantra of “the show must go on” is made credible for
  future use as the final arm-twist of the plot; for in this scene we see the
  face of Harold Zidler move from utter concern to showmanship flair. 
  The smile of the underworld is a mask and all is illusion at the Moulin
  Rouge.  But though the scene of
  Satine’s fall gives the viewer the perspective to carry through the entire
  film, the cycling between tragedy and humor does not let up and this has led
  many to think that Moulin Rouge makes
  light of the prostitution, drug abuse and poverty it portrays. 
  However, as can be gleaned from the implications of its style, this is
  not a detail movie.  It is not
  just a mock-up of reality with a few inconspicuously placed symbols. 
  Everything is exaggerated, from the makeup, to the melodramatically
  caricatured expressions of the actors.  The
  costume and production designer Catherine Martin was awarded appropriately for
  her efforts.  But these efforts
  were not directed toward convincing the viewers that the world they are
  watching is real.  Its mood handy
  weather storms and extreme lighting create a highly stylized world. 
  From the first frame, the audience is not once, but twice removed from
  reality as it views a red curtain’s opening and a conductor’s
  melodramatics before a screen-within-a-screen. 
  This broad brush of a film is best interpreted with broad impressions. 
  Large contrasts are being drawn and if the viewer’s eyes do not go
  where the editing is taking them, they will not understand its message. 
  
    
   Just
  as the heightened style of Moulin Rouge is
  a formal reaction against the smudging of the lines between illusion and
  reality (which can be an effect of naturalism), its watchers will find its
  content occupied with the contrast of illusion weaving with reality. 
  It is a film about the
  entertainers of the upper classes:  entertainers that did not live the joy they acted out before
  their patrons.  The reality of the
  character’s situations contrasts widely with the illusions they must weave
  for the upper classes.  And when
  that line is smudged, the audience is painfully aware. 
  For example, while the viewer is still reeling from the tragedy of
  Satine’s situation – evidenced by her fall – the story’s pace picks
  back up as Zidler finds her being dressed and recouped for her appointment
  with the duke.  Between her
  obvious faking of health and Zidler’s circus-ring-leader-bellowed,
  “…everything’s going so well!!” one almost finds herself groaning with
  the impending tragedy of it all.  
    
   Such
  unexpected contrasts fill the montage of the film.  And these odd juxtapositions yield amazing dramatic power. 
  While Jim Broadbent gives a disarmingly ridiculous performance of
  Madonna’s “Like a Virgin” for the Duke in the Gothic tower, the doctor
  is sticking his needles into the pathetic Satine while Christian is worriedly
  waiting in his apartment, in ignorance of both of the other concurrent events. 
  All this accomplished by pure soundtrack and slow motion, but its
  innovation holds merit worthy of an Oscar…or a quilter’s award.
    
   Since
  Moulin Rouge is a musical, note must
  be made of its brilliance in placing song central in its world. 
  The hero is an Orpheus figure and the montage sets up the pacing
  brilliantly for his enchanting songs.[ii]
   The first scene between Christian
  and the bohemian acting troupe builds in pace to an agonizing cacophony and
  when Mr. McGregor belts his first notes, the viewer feels the movie breathe
  for the first time.  From chaos to
  order in a few clear belted notes is a formal theme in pacing that repeats
  itself in the first scene between the two lovers. 
  Mr. Luhrmann’s irreverently low humor takes full advantage of the
  ridiculous contrast between the poetry reading of a young idealist and the
  seasoned seduction technique of a prostitute. 
  The acting in this scene is fully worthy of Ms. Kidman’s Academy
  Award nomination and Mr. McGregor’s portrayed naiveté makes his character
  fully worthy of hero status.  Through
  his looks of bewilderment at Satine’s orgiastic antics on the floor, the
  viewer begins to gather the same pre-indigestion feel that she had in the
  aforementioned scene.  Then our
  hero turns away and belts purity into the night…and all changes. 
  The spell of illusion is broken and real love has penetrated the lair
  of the seductress.  
    
   Similarly,
  formal contrast is used with the lover’s duet. 
  It is the only original song in the score.  Everything else is arranged from borrowed sources and likely
  to be laughably familiar to the viewer.  Incidentally,
  this is not a case of “deconstruction,” though some critics have held so,
  as much as it is a case of “reconstruction.” 
  The songs are carefully chosen for the place they take in the context
  of the story.  But whenever the
  love song is sung by either of the lovers, every formal element applicable
  is employed to bring a feel of fresh authenticity. 
  As the plot complications begin to sweep up our two lovers, there are
  occasions for both Satine and Christian to bring the refrain “…come what
  may” in a relative key that would make any music theory guru sigh in
  ecstasy.  The change of key
  effects a sense of remembrance to the listener, and we get the idea that the
  lover singing is calling the lover listening back
  to recognition of their faithful – and therefore secure – bond: 
  a shift of key for a shift of emotion. 
  
    
   The
  Christian Faith:  
   Some
  viewers of Moulin Rouge will not
  stay after the first few minutes precisely because it will make them feel like
  they are in a bordello.  Though
  there are purity of mind issues that cannot be ignored if Christians are to be
  sensitive to one another’s sensitivities, it must be countered that Mr.
  Luhrmann does not treat his subject amorally. 
  He goes for an emotional effect, but puts it in cognitive categories
  for the viewer – though the order of the two projects are more unexpected
  than one would sometimes like.  Some
  movies will, in pretense of “objectivity” present images in such a manner
  that they are not put into a determinable direction within their narrative.  But Moulin Rouge is
  not one of these movies.  Most
  every element contained is either definably minor or definably major. And all
  the majors are tied into neat little bundles by the end. 
  The film’s subject is a brothel; no one argues that. 
  But the characters are spending all their time trying to escape from or
  transform their context.  From the
  very first scene between Zidler and Satine, we are given view of their dreams. 
  Through this huddled and rushed bit of dialogue and Satine’s fall
  from the trapeze, Luhrmann makes a B-line for the character development of the
  personality most vulnerable to shallow objectification: 
  the prostitute.
    
   As
  for positive dialogue concerning the film, it is admirable that in the world
  of the Moulin Rouge, battles are fought over whose story gets to be told. 
  “Truth” is one of the four values of the bohemians in this film,
  while in our world, we keep insisting that no one’s “personal” story has
  to have anything to do with anyone else’s. 
  It is here that Moulin Rouge wields its mightiest ax to the
  cynic-become-relativist mindset.  Though
  the movie is no epistemological analysis, it is a meditation of sorts on
  belief; but belief of a certain kind:  specific,
  yet universally recognized belief.  When
  the acting troupe asks Christian if he believes in “truth, beauty, freedom
  and love”, they are assuming to know enough of the four words to all share
  allegiance in them.  And of love,
  what true relativist would make claim of anything to be “the greatest thing
  in all the world”?  Yet
  Christian spouts it again and again – and he is not spurned for it; rather,
  vindicated.  This brand of proselytism could surely never be swallowed by
  today’s audience members…be it for anything but a concept so abstract and
  obliging as the noun “love.”  The
  concept receives little more than one qualification throughout the unfolding
  of the plot; but one is all that is needed for its place within the plot. 
  “Love” is faithfulness – a faithfulness that is given specific
  portrayal in this film.  The irony
  of the beloved being a prostitute only serves to bring more focus on the event
  in the Gothic tower wherein Satine maintains, at great cost, faithfulness to
  her Christian; and the ensuing violence of the scene tragically, but nobly,
  transforms her from prostitute to rape victim. 
  Yet an even more powerful device within the story is the role served by
  the lover’s secret duet.  
    
   “Come
  what may” serves as the lover’s vows of faithfulness to each other. 
  Though introduced in the story as a secret code necessitated by the
  villain’s domination over Satine, by the end of the movie the song comes to
  its full fruition as Satine and Christian’s public, though unexpected,
  wedding vows.  By this final
  scene, Christian’s proclamation of his belief in love as the “greatest
  thing in all the world” has run its course from public pronunciation of
  belief to personal internalization as an authentic value, and back to public
  proclamation as testimony. Between his initial profession of love as “the
  greatest…”, and the final proclamation, love has become incarnate between
  he and Satine.
    
   The
  value of love as “the greatest…” is a parallel value in the
  Judeo-Christian faith.  The Hebrew
  Shema declares, “Hear oh Israel, the Lord your God, the Lord is one. 
  Love the lord your God with all your heart, and all your strength and
  all your soul (Deut. 6:4,5).”  But
  the decalogue (Ex. 20:1-17) makes more clear that part of loving God is loving
  one’s neighbor.  Roughly half of
  the ten commandments are exhortations in loving God; half in loving neighbor. 
  In the New Testament, the Apostle Paul (Rom 13:9) echoes his Lord in
  summing up obedience to “the law” of God in the law of love and Jesus
  virtually equates the two in the Upper Room discourse (John 13-17). But it
  should be noted that this connection of goodness with love is missing in Moulin
  Rouge.  There is no explicit
  mention of “goodness” in the bohemians’ dogma of “freedom, beauty,
  truth and love” (and this in marked contrast to the classical trinity of
  “goodness beauty and truth”).  Yet,
  at the same time, the treatment of the characters who use the word “sin”
  is in an unfair monochromatic; as if only mean, old cronies use the word
  “sin.”  In the Judeo-Christian
  faiths, goodness and sin are matters of love and lack-love. 
  And in the Christian faith, the supreme example of love was shown in
  the death of Jesus Christ – which was necessitated by our sin. 
  In the absence of “goodness” as an expressed value in Moulin Rouge,
  the film fails to rise out of the false dichotomy drawn by seculars between
  love and holiness.  But perhaps
  the film could be instructive for pre-evangelistic dialogue. 
  For if non-Christians do not see “goodness” in the company of
  “love”, we cannot expect them to understand “love” in the company of
  “goodness”.  We must be ready
  to speak about goodness in terms of faithfulness to a beloved, recognizing
  that we – like Satine – waver in our ability to be faithful. 
    
   God
  likens himself, through the prophet Hosea, to a man who marries a woman of
  prostitution.  Time and again she
  leaves him.  Time and again he
  takes her back.  The first time I
  saw Moulin Rouge, I walked away
  thinking of the character Christian, “poor naïve boy.” 
  But Christian was the vessel through which Love enchanted the
  underworld.  Seen in that light,
  perhaps we could just take the last three letters off his name.
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